Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

French Open flap

-

On a day when No. 1 Andy Murray and No. 3 Stan Wawrinka won, and a couple top- 10 players unaccustom­ed to long stays at the French Open lost, the most buzzworthy moment at Roland Garros stemmed from a match between guys ranked 50th and 285th in the world during the customary postmatch handshake.

PARIS — As anyone who ever has played or watched tennis — profession­al or recreation­al — knows, the postmatch handshake at the net is as much a customary part of the sport as a racket, ball or serve. So when a player who lost at the French Open rebuffed his opponent’s attempt at the ritual Tuesday, it became the talk of the tournament.

On a day when No. 1 Andy Murray and No. 3 Stan Wawrinka won, and a couple top10 players unaccustom­ed to long stays at Roland Garros — Alexander Zverev in the men’s draw, Johanna Konta in the women’s — lost, the most buzzworthy developmen­t stemmed from a match between one guy who stands 50th in the world and another who is 285th.

After losing to Martin Klizan of Slovakia 7- 6 ( 4), 6- 3, 4- 6, 0- 6, 6- 4 in the first round at Roland Garros, wildcard entry Laurent Lokoli of France skipped the usual sign of sportsmans­hip. Instead, he went to the sideline to pack up his things.

When Klizan approached, right arm extended, Lokoli dismissive­ly waved him off with the back of a hand, motioning to stay away. Afterward, Lokoli said he wasn’t being a sore loser but rather that he didn’t want to shake because he thought Klizan was faking an injury during the match and was generally “disrespect­ful.”

“I just have [ a] problem with his attitude,” Lokoli said, “because he wasn’t fair. That’s it.”

Klizan, who will face Murray in the second round, initially opened his news conference by being confrontat­ional with reporters, repeatedly saying he had no comment and adding: “I don’t want you to make a big story about nothing.”

Eventually, he spoke about a problem with his left calf that he said forced him to pull out of other recent claycourt tournament­s and made him consider withdrawin­g from the French Open. Later Tuesday, Klizan played in a doubles match that he and Joao Sousa of Portugal lost in straight sets.

Lokoli was angered by what he interprete­d as gamesmansh­ip, saying Klizan appeared to be dogging it in moments — such as the 6- 0 fourth set — hampered by his leg: “I’m wondering if he’s going to retire or no, because now he’s not running anymore, you know?” And then, in Lokoli’s view, Klizan suddenly would be fine.

“I’m just saying that, you know, there are ways of doing things. If you’re injured, for instance, well, you’re injured. So what? Call the doctors,” Lokoli said. “This is what really bothered me.”

He added: “Look at reality. The person just on the other side of the net is doing things that are very, very weird. Strange things.”

Klizan explained the fourth set this way: “He played perfect. No mistake. Serving aces. I was playing bad. At that time, I feel a little bit one pinch in my calf. So I was scared.”

As video of their awkward exchange after the final point made the rounds on social media, even Murray took note.

“Obviously I saw a few videos of [ Klizan’s] match today,” Murray said after his 6- 4, 4- 6, 6- 2, 6- 0 victory over Andrey Kuznetsov. “It was obviously a pretty entertaini­ng match.”

Murray, the runner- up in Paris last year, overcame some trouble in the second set, broken in 3 of 4 service games during one stretch. But he picked up his game in the last two sets, which the threetime major champion saw as a good sign after struggles this year.

“It was a decent start,” Murray said, “considerin­g, obviously, how I played in the buildup.”

While 2015 champion Wawrinka, No. 8 Kei Nishikori, No. 18 Nick Kyrgios and No. 29 Juan Martin del Potro were among other winners on Day 3, No. 9 Zverev and No. 27 Sam Querrey were seeded men who exited.

The only seeded woman to lose was Konta, who was a semifinali­st at the Australian Open last year but never has won a main- draw match at the French Open.

Zverev is a 20- year- old who won the Italian Open last week, raising his profile considerab­ly, but he has yet to reach the second week of a Grand Slam tournament.

“You sometimes play bad. It’s just: This is our sport. There are no regrets. I mean, what can you do? In Rome, I played fantastic, I won the tournament. Here I played bad, I lost first round. That’s the way it goes,” said Zverev, who broke a racket over his leg during his 6- 4, 3- 6, 6- 4, 6- 2 loss to Fernando Verdasco.

“But,” he added, “the world doesn’t stop now.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States